4.6 Article

Germline Neurofibromin 1 mutation enhances the anti-tumour immune response and decreases juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia tumourigenicity

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY
Volume 202, Issue 2, Pages 328-343

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bjh.18851

Keywords

differentiation; germline mutation; induced pluripotent stem cells; JMML; NF1

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Juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia (JMML) is a pediatric leukemia characterized by mutations in RAS pathway genes, including NF1 gene, which drive the disease's progression. While germline NF1 mutations primarily cause benign tumors, the underlying mechanism for JMML development remains unclear. This study reveals that reduced NF1 gene dose promotes immune cells in anti-tumor immune response, with NF1 mutations or knockout recapitulating JMML's pathological characteristics. The study also suggests a potential cell immunotherapy for JMML patients.
Juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia (JMML) is an aggressive paediatric leukaemia characterized by mutations in five canonical RAS pathway genes, including the NF1 gene. JMML is driven by germline NF1 gene mutations, with additional somatic aberrations resulting in the NF1 biallelic inactivation, leading to disease progression. Germline mutations in the NF1 gene alone primarily cause benign neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) tumours rather than malignant JMML, yet the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that with reduced NF1 gene dose, immune cells are promoted in anti-tumour immune response. Comparing the biological properties of JMML and NF1 patients, we found that not only JMML but also NF1 patients driven by NF1 mutations could increase monocytes generation. But monocytes cannot further malignant development in NF1 patients. Utilizing haematopoietic and macrophage differentiation from iPSCs, we revealed that NF1 mutations or knockout (KO) recapitulated the classical haematopoietic pathological features of JMML with reduced NF1 gene dose. NF1 mutations or KO promoted the proliferation and immune function of NK cells and iMacs derived from iPSCs. Moreover, NF1-mutated iNKs had a high capacity to kill NF1-KO iMacs. NF1-mutated or KO iNKs administration delayed leukaemia progression in a xenograft animal model. Our findings demonstrate that germline NF1 mutations alone cannot directly drive JMML development and suggest a potential cell immunotherapy for JMML patients.

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